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THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 26, 1951
ice
= Phone 328
g
Exeter
HENSALL
Miss Lettie Love, of Toronto,
holidaying with htr father.
William Love.
Miss Marguerite McDonald of
ndon spent the past week
r mother. Mrs. McDonald.
Mrs. Edna Corbett spent
' week-end at the home of
son-in-law and daughter,
and Mrs. Harold Parker,
hurst
, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Mickle and
family have returned from a
pRasant holiday at Rondeau
Park
Miss
■visited
' Kipfer
Kipfer.
: Mrs.
; tha Haidman of Zurie
cent visitors with Mr
Archie MacGregor.
The many friends of Miss Eli
zabeth Slavin will be pleased to
;hear she
lv from
■ removed
.] Hospital
Home in
K
with
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE FOR SALE WANTED
Chisel-
of Toronto
Mrs. Cecil
Mrs. Ezra
Heideman and Miss Mar-
'li were re-
. and Mrs.
has recovered sufficient-
her hip fracture to be
from Clinton General , MORE
to Mrs. Hodgert’s Rest ; Boupv
Exeter.
1951. charges for the following
will be in-
LE— t’0
Phone 57-r-10
E. Oestreiclier.
started pigs.
Dashweed. A.
19:26'9*
FOR SALE—T earn of w o r k
horses 6 and 8 years eld. Ap
ply Eugene Dietrich, 31-r-5
Dashwood. 19:26*
FOR SALE—-One maroon baby
jrain: 1 small Quebec heater;
1 rangette. AU to he sold as
cheaply as possible. - Phone
Exeter 344-J. 26*
FOR SALE—-'42 Chev Coach in
A-l condition. $750.00. Phone
15, Exeter. 26c
FOR SALE—1950 Ford 4-dOor
Custom Sedan. Perfect condi
tion, $1,81'0.00. 1951 Ford 4-
door Custom Sedan, 3,000
miles, under factory guaran
tee. $2,150.00. Apply Mason’s
Supertest, Grand Bend. 26c
THE EXETER SALVAGE CO,
want all kinds of new and
used feathers and feather
ticks. Top price. Also all kinds
of scrap metal. Phone 423,
Exeter, collect. We pick up.
5-14tfc
ROOMERS WANTED
364-R.
Phone
26*
FOR SALE—Have an unlimited
quantity of barn fertilizer, $5
per spreader load. —G. J.
Dow. 5tfc
SUNSHINE RANGETTE, deluxe
model with utility drawer,
used just one year, looks in
new condition. Phone 523-W
evenings. 26tfn
ROOMERS WANTED— One or 2
gentlemen. Breakfast if de
sired. Phone 178-r-ll Exeter.
26c
REAL ESTATE
Effective August I.
services offered by The Tinies-Advocate
creased. The new prices are:
CARDS OF THANKS ...................
IN MEMORIAM (One verse) ......
Each additional verse .....................
.75
.75
225
These price changes are made necessary by rising
costs in all lines of materials being used in the pro
duction of this newspaper. Your understanding will
be appreciated.
n
YOU CAN WIN
CREDITON FRAME house, largo
living
room,
chen.
bath,
water
hard
20x30
floor,
building. W
tor, Exeter,
FOR SALE—Oliver 99 tractor in
good condition. Very reason
able. I. K. Weber, Exeter. 26*
room, den and dining
hardwood floors, kit-
4 bedrooms, 3 - p i e c o
full basement, cistern,
pressure system, good
water. Well built barn
concrete foundation and
Extra lot suitable for
C. Pearce, Real-
7tfo
Why have MOTH DAMAGE? 5-
year written guarantee with
Berlou against moth damage
on rugs, chesterfields and
clothing. Free estimates. —
Dinney Furniture, phone 20-W
Sctfn
CANADIAN NURSES IN TOKYO Capt.
Royal Australian Nursing Service. Ebisu camp,
greets (left to right A Lieut. Wilma Kilpatrick, Win-
Lit ut. Margaret Scott. London. Ont.; Lieut. Rachel
Plant, Quebec City, and Capt, Margaret Doddridge. Quebec
I ity. The latter comprise a new Canadian medical contingent
just arrived in Tokyo. —Central Press Canadian
'J okyo
ripeg:
J
t Hannam Sees Farm Price Drop,
\Grower Not Getting Share
HONEY FOR SALE — White
clover honey of excellent qual
ity. (In customer’s containers
20 cents a pound.) J. Haberer
Sons, Zurich, Ont., 3 blocks
south of hotel. 19:26:9c
FOR SALE—Hydraulic hoist
with or without steel body in
good condition. Also 8.25x20
tires. Exeter Salvage Co., tele
phone 4 23 Exeter.26c
FOR SALE — Rangette “Super
ior” in good condition. Phone
97-R, 41 Ann St.26*NEW BRICK HOME—This new
home is nicely located in Exe
ter. It has been built for util
ity and comfort and is
equipped with all modern con
veniences. If you are consider
ing buying or building, let us
show you this well built, up-
to-date home. Quick posses
sion. C. V. Pickard, Realtor,
Main St., Exeter.
FOR SALE—F our acres of
standing Clinton oats. Apply
Ralph Batten, Huron St. E.
26*FOR SALE—12 good weaner
pigs, ready by Aug. 1. Apply
W. H. Pfile, R.R. 1, Hensall,
phone 685-r-3 Hensall. 19:26*FOR SALE—12 choice pigs over
six weeks old. Apply Joe Day
man, phone 679-r-33 Hensall.
26c
of farm produce! one acre in every three under
not, necesarily, ; cultivation had been devoted to ■is in sight, accord
ing to Dr. H. H. Hannan, pre
sident of the Canadian Federa
tion of Agriculture,
Speaking to the annual jointipaid to compensate' for “the prob-
HJgetiXlg Of AniAn/iflYi Parm I __ _ ____
Association
Agricultural
at the Ontario Agricultural Col
lege, Dr. Hannam was somewhat
pessimistic about the effect of
the defense effort on Canadian
agriculture.
Probable decrease in produce
, prices he attributed to the carry-
; over of feed grains and the like-
lihood of a large crop this year.
Since high meat prices are dir-
. ectly the result of export to the
> U.S. at U.S. prices, meat, pre-
sumably, would be only slightly
< affected.
Unlike economists addressing
j the convention—Dr. Hannam ex-
i plained he was not an economist
‘ —he felt that present Canadian
1 fiscal and momentary controls
would be sufficient to combat in-
5 flation.
He thought the measures im
posed to date had a striking ef
fect, and that their repercusions
Some easing
prices—though i meat prices-
i
of the American Farm
and the Canadian
Economics Society
• exportable products.
Furthermore, if food was of
■ paramount importance in defense,
■( insufficient attention had been
• able loss of farm manpower to
factories and the forces in the
i event of war,
■ Implement manufacturers were
! dropping some lines of farm ma-
! chines, he said, and retailers
‘were unable to make deliveries.
: The farmer was faced with a
. price ramp in buying equipment
and materials necessary to the
operation of his farm,
event of a world war,
; would be an over-all shortage
' farm machinery.
In the
there
of
FOR SALE—Grain tank, capac
ity 75 bus. —Gordon Prance,
Winchelsea. 26*
FOR SALE—Custom corn bind
er, C, J. Walker, Cromarty,
phone 12-r-13 Dublin. This
machine is especially equipped
with rubber rolls, 26*
FOR SALE — Rangette “Sum
mers”, in good condition. —
Phone 12-M Exeter. 26c
FOR SALE—New CCM hike
wagon, $13.95; lady’s bicycle,
$23. W7. Martin, Exeter South.
26*
FOR SALE—Ice-box, in
condition. Also Sunshine
buggy, silver-grey, like
Phone 226.
good
baby
new.
26*
FOR SALE—Two bull calves.
Apply to Gib Dow, Exeter. 26c
BARGAINS!
“Life” 70 issues $7.27
“Times” 78 issues $6.87
New or renewal orders on all
magazines promptly serviced.
HARRY T. BUSTON
Phone 308-T-5 Exeter
Jnl4 :Ag9c
FOR SALE—Two-storey b r i c k
house, insulated, full base
ment. Living room, dinin-g
room, modern kitchen, bath
down, three bedrooms, bath
up. Sun porch, extra closets,
good garage. Centrally located
on William St. Phone 379-M.
'J. 2,19 *
AB^ C5 BKYCIE
In just a few weeks time you can own one of these
brand new bikes ... a smart table radio for your own
room ... or one of 120 other valuable prizes just for
saving Kist Bottle Tops. Here’s how to do it.
Whenever you get a Kist Bottle Top, lift the cork
lining and look for the letter K-I-S- or T printed on
the inside metal surface. Then go to your nearest
Kist dealer's store . . . the man who sells delicious
ice-cold Kist . . . and ask for your copy of Kist Con
test Rules. They’ll tell you how you can win your new
hike or one of the 120 valuable prizes. Start saving
lucky Kist Bottle Tops right away.
frfter bottle topKIST €OH’“I
§Dutch Immigrants
—Continued from Page 1
In this district, they have
■ formed a club which they call
“the husband and wife club”,
composed of about 15 couples
who meet at a different home
-every two weeks. The nucleus of
_~ _______ _______.this club is the home of Mr. and
were likely to last for some time. . Mrs. Cornelius Flikweert. Tham-
But he was afraid that Canadian.: es Road. Mrs. Flikweert, after
' agriculture economy, based upon , three years in the
its exports would suffer in the; speaks English well
j long run. although the price sit- ! been instrumental in
tuation wag at present satisfact- more interest for the , . _.
| ory to the agriculturalist. among her Dutch friends.i The farmer, Dr. Hannam said, j She stated that she tries to
I was not getting his full share of:speak English most of the time !present prices. From May. 1950,
I to June 1951. prices of indus-
j trial materials rose 3 per cent ! while farm produce prices rose
i only 15 per cent. Retail prices
I went up 17 per cent and there
jwas a 12 per cent increase in the
cost-of-living index. In the same
{period, farm wages rose 12 per
' cent.
I The farmer was at a disadvan-
■ tage. he said, in competing for i
! labor against industry, because of 1
. the continuing decrease in hours
’ worked in industry.
; Before the outbreak of war in
.Korea, Dr. Hannam said, there
had been embarrassing surpluses
of some Canadian farm products.
After the war began, these sur
pluses became “strategic r e-
. serves.” But the gradual loss of
; export markets c-ould be serious
; to Canadian agriculture. sin«?f I
country,
and has
creating
language
there is no
to build a.
children.”
of the Flik-
she explained, “and
security on which
home and bring up
Outside the
weert home is
shoes, “which
memories” the
explained, while inside the house
is a Canadian kitchen, the pantry
stocked with Canadian foods, and
inside the hearts of these people
is a desire to merge into the
Canadian way of life, to
with the country and to
that they are part of the
future of this nation.
door
a pair of wooden
we have kept for
lady of the house
grow
know
great
(although her husband does not
always understand her. “Since
we have chosen Canada, it is
■ necessary that we know the lan
guage well." she stated.
. She and her husband hope to
own a farm of their own before
too long. “Holland is too crowd-*
' ed for the young people who .
i want tc establish themselves,” i
i
Smile At This One
An Irishman who was coming
out of the ether in the ward
after an operation, exclaimed
audibly: “Thank goodness!
That's over!”
“Don’t be too
man in the next
a sponge in me
me open again.”
Just then the surgeon who
performed the operation
his head in the door and
out: “Has anybody see my hat?”
The Irishman fainted.
sure,” said
bed. “They
and had to
the
left
cut
had
stuck
called
ENGLISH
$1.00 Per Bag
R. G. SELDON
Phone 90-W
Honey
We are prepared to supply you
with choice quality White Honey
AT 20(! PER LB.
EWART PYM
Simcoe Street, Exeter
TWO USED RANGETTES
and
TWO USED RANGES
Excellent Condition
Reasonably Priced
R. E. Russell
Phone 109 Exeter
Announcements
BIRTHS
I BELL—Mr.
! Bell wish
■ rival of
daughter.
and Mrs. Harold
tc announce the ar
their adopted baby
Carol Ann.
LOST
ANOTHER NEW Exeter Home—
This house is roomy and nice
ly laid out. You will particu
larly like the large, well light
ed, living room. It has every
convenience including air con
ditioned oil burning furnaco.
Terms if desired. —C. V. Pic
kard, Main St., Exeter.
COMFORTABLE Small Home on
nice lot. Modern kitchen and
bathroom, 2 bedrooms, all on.
one floor, c. V. Pickard, Main
St., Exeter.
LARGE BRICK HOUSE—J acre
of land. Small barn. House
has good roof and floors.
Hydro and water on tap.
Price $3,500. —C. V. Pickard,
Main St., Exeter.
CENTRALIA—Large brick house,
nicely divided into four good
apartments with modern kit
chens, new hot. water heating,
2 bedrooms, garage and extra
lots. Will provide a nice home
and good monthly income. —
C. V. Pickard, Realtor, Main
St., Exeter.
HENSALL lJ-storey frame house
in good location, has furnace,
garage, wide lot. Also 1 £-
storey frame house, new fur
nace, .partial bath, garage. W.
C. Pearce, Realtor, Earl Par
sons, Salesman, Exeter.
FOR SALE-
Considerably improved,
furnished. Cash
—11 Ann Street.
War Time house.
Fully
terms only.
19:26*
• HAGERMAN—Orville and Mar
ion Hagerman are happy to
announce the birth of their
son, Ross Eric; at General
Hospital, Regina, Sask., July
14. 1951; a brother for Nor
ine.
iPRESZCATOR — Mr. and Mrs.
1 Howard Preszcator are happy
’ to announce the birth of a
j daughter. Jeanette Marie; on
i July 24. at the Hunter Nurs- ! ing Home.
■ REID—Clarence and Iva Reid of
Hensall are very happy to an
nounces the birth of their son
at the Clinton Hospital on
Tuesday, July 24, 1951; a
brother for Jerry.
SMITH—Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J.
Smith ate happy to announce
, the birth of a son. Donald
John; at Scott Memorial Hos
pital. Seaforth, on Sunday,
July 22, 1951.
DEATHS
KUNTZ—In Exeter, on Friday,
July 20, 1951, William Kuntz,
in his eightieth year.
CARDS OF THANKS
Mr. and Mrs. George Davis
wish to thank their many friends
and neighbours for their many
acts of kindness, all the cards,
letters and flowers, also treats
during Mrs. Davis* illness in Vic
toria Hospital, London, and since
returning home. 26*
Mrs. Sid Wilson and family, of
R.R, 1 Centralia, wish to express
their thanks to the relatives,
neighbours and friends for their
sympathy and kindness extended
to them in their recent loss of
Husband and Father; those who
so generously gave help and of
fers of help also for the beauti
ful floral tributes and to those
who loaned cars. Special thanks
to the pall bearers, flower bear
ers, the W.M.S. and W.A. of
Elimville and Rev. M. Elson.
26*
i
CARDS OF THANKS
Mr. William H. Smith, of Cre-
diton. wishes to thank his many
friends for the cards, treats and
visits while in the hospital and
later at home. 26*
The family of the late Herald
F. Lawrence wish to express
their deep appreciation for the
many kind expressions of sym
pathy shown them in their re
cent sad bereavement. 26*
i
I
Orland Taylor wishes to ex
press his thanks for the cards,
treats, flowers and personal visits
he received while a patient in
Victoria Hospital and since re
turning home. 26*
IN MEMORIAM
BULLOCK—In loving memory of
Thomas W. Bullock,
passed away on August
1935, and his wife,
Louisa Bullock, who was
en from us one year ago
24, 1950.
Asleep in God’s
Free from all
And when our
ended
We know we
again.
—Ever remembered
and son-in-law,
and John.
who
22,
Mrs.
tak-
July
beautiful garden
sorrow and pain,
life’s journey is
shall meet them
DAVEY—In fond
by daughter
Mary Anne
26*
best
called to perfect
Saviour's breast,
by husband and
26c i
i
I
and loving
memory of a dear wife
mother, Susannah Davey,
passed away three years
July 26, 1948.
We knew it was all for the
When you were
rest,
Upon a loving
—Sadly missed
family.
HUTCHINSON—In loving mem
ory of our mother, Willa Hut
chinson, who died July 23,
1942.
Gone from us but
ories,
Death can never
Memories that will
While upon this earth we stay.
--Ever remembered by her lov
ing sons and daughters, 26c
1
leaving mem
take away
always linger
Lost
$10.00 BILL
in Post Office or vicinity, dinner
hour Saturday. Reward. Ray
Williamson, Irving Apts., An
drew St., Exeter.
FEMALE HELP WANTED
DOUBLE YOUR INCOME — Be
come direct factory represent
ative for large company estab
lished over 25 years. Lovely
dress and lingerie styles, new
est range of fabrics
ours. Also highest
sions, bonuses. Write
Dobie, British Knit
Mgr., Lucan, Ont.
and col-
com mis
Mrs. R.
District
26:9c
HELP WANTED FEMALE—For
silk finishing department; ex
perience not necessary. Brady
Cleaners or phone 13 6. 26c
NOTICES
HENSALL UNION CEMETERY
All parties in arrears for care
of lots are asked to kindly remit
at once. Any donations will ibe
greatly appreciated by the Board
and of real assistance in this
work.
R. J. PATERSON,
Treasurer.
12:19:26c
AUCTION SALES
AUCTION SALE
COMMUNITY STOCK YARDS,
ZURICH
on
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1
8:00 P.M.
Number of mixed pigs, some
young sows; also cows and
calves and miscellaneous items,
including a Chevrolet 15 cwt. 4-
wheel drive army truck like new,
correct mileage 1,400 miles.
Bring in what you have to sell.
TERMS: Cash.
WES MERNER, MANAGER
ALVIN WALPER, AUCT.
26c
FOR SALE—Large .brick house
in Centralia; insulated, forced-
air furnace,
water
bath,
chen,
dining room, new roof,
lot, 24 apple trees bearing all
Small fruit, good barn. Would
exchange for good brick cot
tage in Exeter. Apply Mrs.
Bertha Field, Centralia.
hard and soft
under pressue, 3-plecc
sunporch, modern kit
circulator fireplace in
2-acrc
MISCELLANEOUS
26*
DRESSMAKING, alterations, and
mending—bring to Mrs. El
more Gackstetter, R.R. 3, Exe
ter, 1% miles north of Exeter
on No. 4 highway, 1% miles
east. 26c
CUSTOM COMBINING—Apply ((.
K. Weber, or Irving •Snider,
Waterloo Equipment, phone
4 43-J Exeter. 26*
SPRAY PAINTING — Barns,
houses, roofs, etc. —Gordon
Eagleson, phone 40-r-2, Dash
wood. 21:28:5:12:19:26c
SERVICE for your present car
or a new Dodge automobile or
truck. Both are obtainable
simply by calling Hensall 31.
SEWING MACHINES bought,
sold, serviced and repaired.
Phone evenings, Bob McLean,
5 2 7-J. 30tfc
I AM IN THE MARKET for all
kinds of horses, any size, any
age. — G. J. Dow. phone 83
Exeter. ‘ l*tfc
PAINTING and paperhanging,
kitchen cupboards and cab
inets. Tom Walker, Exeter,
phone 553. tfc
NOTICE — Whitewashing and
cleaning, arrangements can 'be
made. Bill Watson, phone 35-
r-19 Dashwood. Jul5:S27c
■SEWAGE DISPOSAL—-Equipped
to clean up septic tanks, cess
pools, etc.; have modern
power pump and tank. Schools
and public buildings a special
ty. Irvin Coxon, phone 75-r-4
Milverton. Jull2:S6*